JAZZ STANDARD, one of the nation's premier jazz
clubs, offers another impressive month of music with jazz legends and rising stars
throughout October. The 2012 Festival of New Trumpet Music (FONT) will feature performances
by Jack Walrath (10/4), Charles Tolliver (10/5), Tom Harrell
(10/6), and Claudio Roditi (10/7). On October 13 & 14, the SFJAZZ Collective
plays the music of jazz living legend Chick Corea. The dynamic drummer Francisco
Mela will lead two exciting bands this month, appearing with a quartet on 10/30
and with Cuban Safari on 10/31. Our ever–popular "Mingus Mon­days" resi­dency continues
in October with the Grammy Award–winning Mingus Big Band appearing every
week on 10/1, 10/8, 10/15, 10/22, and 10/29. Be­low is a com­plete schedule of October
per­form­ances at JAZZ STANDARD, along with informa­tion on the musicians. For every­thing
else, visit www.jazzstandard.com.

NEVER A MINIMUM
Student Discounts (restrictions apply)
Enjoy "NYC's Best Barbecue" (Time Out New York) from BLUE SMOKE
and an extensive wine, beer and cocktail list

Jazz for Kids every Sunday
*Starts Sunday 10/21*
Open for lunch at 1pm, music from 1:30–3pm

For reservations call Jazz Standard at 212.576.2232 or visit www.ticketweb.com
Artists and schedules are subject to change

OCTOBER 2012 SCHEDULE

10/1 Mingus Big Band
The Mingus Big Band – winners of a 2010 Grammy Award for the thrilling album
Live At Jazz Standard – returns to our stage for two incendiary sets of music
by legendary bassist, composer and bandleader Charles Mingus (1922–1979).Music Charge: $25

Small Places, the new album by Michael Formanek, is the bassist/composer's
follow–up to The Rub and Spare Change, his widely lauded ECM debut as a leader.
That 2010 release garnered a rare five–star review in DownBeat magazine,
while The New York Times described the disc as being "graceful in its subversions,
often even sumptuous." This exclusive Jazz Standard engagement spotlights the music
of Small Places with Formanek at the helm of the recording band, including
altoist Tim Berne, pianist Craig Taborn, and drummer Gerald Cleaver. Earthy yet
atmospheric, this is very 21st century American jazz, the music brimming
with piquant riffs and muscular ostinatos, rich in melodic possibility and the sound
of surprise.Music Charge: $20

10/4 – 10/7 FESTIVAL OF NEW TRUMPET MUSIC (FONT)
Under the direction of founder Dave Douglas, the Festival of New Trumpet Music (FONT)
has presented innovative and exciting programs at Jazz Standard every year since
its inception in 2003. Past FONTs have honored greats like Bobby Bradford, Wadada
Leo Smith, and Kenny Wheeler; the 2012 series de­votes each of its four nights to
the music of a different brass master.

Jack Walrath began playing the trumpet at age nine while growing up in Edgar, Montana
(pop. 100). Over the course of a 45–year career, his prodigious talents have been
utilized by Charles Mingus, Ray Charles, Muhal Richard Abrams, Sam Rivers, Miles
Davis, Quincy Jones, and Elvis Costello, just to name a few. Walrath has released
22 albums as a leader and appeared on innumerable recording sessions led by other
artists, including fourteen albums by Charles Mingus. "His playing has the articulate
sarcasm of a Lee Morgan, his writing reflects the eclecticism and bravura of his
former mentor Charles Mingus...Every style is navigated with maximum authenticity,
instrumental prowess and humor." (Chip Stern, Musician) A FONT commission
"has inspired me to write what Mingus called ‘extended composition, ' to be premi­ered
at the festival, " says Jack Walrath. "This will be no ditty!"Music Charge: $25

In recent years, Charles Tolliver has become best known for leading a high–octane
big band. But for this special FONT appearance, the veteran trumpeter and composer–arranger
will appear with a top–shelf quintet that includes the fine pianist Xavier Davis
(Betty Carter, Regina Carter, Stefon Harris, et al). "[Tolliver's] trumpet retains
much of its vigorous tone, diligent logic, and controlled fury." (Gary Giddins)Music Charge: $30

Tom Harrell is widely recognized as one of the most creative and uncompromising
jazz instrumentalists and composers of our time. His warm, burnished sound on the
trumpet and the flugelhorn, and the unpar­alleled harmonic and rhythmic sophistication
in his playing and writing, have earned Harrell his place as a jazz icon to aspiring
musicians and devoted fans alike. Tom Harrell's career discography encompasses more
than 260 recordings including his 2012 release Number Five.Music Charge: $30

10/7 Claudio Roditi with the West Point Jazz Knights Big Band
Claudio Roditi – trumpet

Born 1946 in Rio de Janeiro, Claudio Roditi arrived in New York in 1976 and quickly
broke into the local circuit, performing and recording with Joe Henderson, Charlie
Rouse, Herbie Mann, Tito Puente, McCoy Tyner, and Paquito D'Rivera. The trumpeter
is a former member of Dizzy Gillespie's United Nations Orchestra; he earned a Grammy
Award nomination in 1995 for his album Symphonic Bossa Nova with Ettore Stratta
and the Royal Philharmonic. There will be no music charge for tonight's performances,
featuring Claudio Roditi with the acclaimed Jazz Knights big band of the US Military
Academy at West Point.Music Charge: FREE

10/8 Mingus Big Band
"I am convinced that the unifying element in Mingus' music is passion…The basest
materials were melted down and purified in the heat of the Mingus furnace. Not a
dispassionate note was sounded: Players either stood the heat or left the kitchen.
Many who stayed never had finer hours than those Mingus provided." – Composer/arranger
Sy Johnson, from his liner notes to Nostalgia In Times Square / The Immortal
1959 Sessions (Columbia Records, 1979)Music Charge: $25

Hailed by the New York Times as a "revelation, " and by the Chicago Tribune
as "the most promising dis­covery that [Wynton] Marsalis has made since Eric Reed,
" Aaron Diehl's distinctive interpretations of the music of Scott Joplin, Jelly
Roll Morton, Art Tatum, Duke Ellington, and other masters pays homage to the tradition
while establishing his own original voice. Aaron – the 2011 Cole Porter Fellow in
Jazz of the American Pianists Association – has performed with (among others) the
Wynton Marsalis Septet, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, The Boston Symphony
Orchestra, Benny Golson, Hank Jones, and Wycliffe Gordon. Live at Caramoor
captures his glowing solo performance at the prestigious festival in the sum­mer
of 2008, while Live At The Players is his latest trio recording. Vibraphonist
Warren Wolf will be Aaron's special guest for two exhilarating sets tonight.Music Charge: $20

The fiery saxophonist Robin Verheyen was still in his teens when he began forging
a formidable reputa­tion in his native Belgium. After a brief stay in Paris, Verheyen
arrived in New York in 2005 to study with Dave Liebman at the Manhattan School of
Music. Working with trumpet ace Ralph Alessi in his cur­rent quartet, Verheyen's
writing and playing bridges the gap between the blues–and–bop tradition and spontaneous,
sky–stretching improvisation. Robin Verheyen has appeared at major European jazz
festi­vals (North Sea in the Netherlands, Getxo and Bermeo in Spain, etc.) and worked
with such leading lights as Branford Marsalis, Roy Hargrove, and Ravi Coltrane.
Catch this rising star tonight at Jazz Standard!Music Charge: $20

Edmar Castañeda fell in love with the Colombian harp as a boy growing up in Bogota.
But when he moved to the U.S. with his family at age 16 (as he told National Public
Radio), Edmar found that "in high school here, they have bands – they didn't have
harps. And then I wanted to play jazz. So I went to col­lege playing the trumpet,
and it was great, because I learned all the jazz improvisation, and I just passed
it to the harp." Edmar has added his masterful technique and exploratory improvisations
to the music of artists ranging from Lila Downs to Paquito D'Rivera; he partnered
with four–mallet vibraphonist Joe Locke for the 2009 album Entre Cuerdas.
This Jazz Standard return engagement coincides with this unique musician's latest
CD, Double Portion, featuring Gonzalo Rubalcaba (piano), Miguel Zenón (alto
saxophone), and Hamilton de Holanda (mandolin).Music Charge: $25 / $30 Friday

In April 2011, the SFJAZZ Collective knocked out fans and critics alike with their
Jazz Standard perfor­mances of the music of Stevie Wonder – later documented on
the double–CD set Live In New York 2011. Now, SFJAZZ returns to our stage
to play the music of a true living legend of jazz, Armando "Chick" Corea. The 18–time
Grammy Award winner's signature style on both acoustic and electric keyboards has
graced recordings by Miles Davis (Filles de Kilimanjaro and Bitches Brew),
Herbie Hancock, Gary Burton, and Bobby McFerrin, not to mention his fabled group
Return To Forever and landmark collabo­rations with Michael Brecker, Joe Farrell,
John McLaughlin, and Roy Haynes. In addition to Corea's works, each member of SFJAZZ
also will contribute an original composition to the program.

Saxophonist Miguel Zenón calls Chick Corea "one of my biggest inspirations as a
player and com­poser…his music has in many ways shaped the direction of jazz for
the past 40 years." Pianist Edward Simon says: "Chick encompasses my definition
of a true and complete artist: a master of his instrument and a prolific composer
who continues to explore new arenas and break down barriers between musical genres."
SFJAZZ will be recording these performances for future release – come and be part
of the excitement!Music Charge: $30 all shows

10/15 Mingus Big Band
"My entire association with Charles Mingus was an honor and a treat – including
all the moods, temper­aments, personality clashes, cooperation, and feelings of
accomplishment and self–gratification. I can't find any superlatives strong enough
to define what those years meant to me…Jazz, in my language, is a four–letter word
spelled L-O-V-E. Charles Mingus was one of the people who taught me how to spell."
– Pianist Jaki Byard, from his liner notes to Prestige LP Portrait by Charles
Mingus (1980).Music Charge: $25

Tia Fuller's third release on Mack Avenue Records, Angelic Warrior, marks
a giant step in her evolution as an instrumentalist, composer and bandleader. After
five years in superstar Beyoncé's band, the pop diva's attention to detail in the
studio sharpened Tia's own focus as producer of Angelic Warrior. The result
is a complete aesthetic statement that celebrates both the peaceful demeanor of
the "angel" and the drive and determination of the "warrior" spirit within. Angelic
Warrior features such arresting original compositions as "Ode To Be" and "Lil'
Les" alongside Fuller's ingenious reworking of the bop classic "Cherokee" and her
melding of two Cole Porter standards into "So In Love With All of You." For this
special CD launch, Tia will be joined by most of the musicians who appear on her
album including her sister, pianist Shamie Royston; and drummers Rudy Royston and
Terri Lyne Carrington.Music Charge: $20

Known to audiences around the world for his superlative playing with the Terence
Blanchard Quintet, in May 2012 Fabian Almazan released an auspicious debut album,
Personalities, with an array of sounds ranging from 19th century
Cuban danzon to tough, melodic modern jazz. Perhaps the most surprising track
is his version of Shostakovich's String Quartet No. 10, one of Almazan's favorite
pieces from his years of classical piano lessons. The original performance by piano
trio and string quartet was manipulated with signal processers "to create ghostly
wails, chirps and rumbles within Shostakovich's melody, " wrote Geoffrey Himes in
The Washington Post. "…Almazan creates narratives with his instrumental music,
whether it's the story of his childhood in Havana, his early gigs in Manhattan,
his classical piano lessons in Miami, his electronica experiments in Utah or his
observation of stage parents everywhere."Music charge: $20

Has it really been twenty years since Jacky Terrasson made his recording debut as
a leader? Certainly, the pianist's new album Gouache reveals no diminution
of his creative powers or his love of eclectic reper­toire. Gouache's many
delights include Terrasson treatments of Sonny Rollins' "Valse Hot, " John Lennon's
song "Oh My Love" (with an enchanting vocal performance by Cécile McLorin Salvant),
and the album's most surprising choice, an Erik Satie melody entitled "Je te veux."
This Jazz Standard run finds Jacky leading his superb trio with bassist Burniss
Travis and drummer Justin Faulkner. "I'm a player; I love the playful aspect of
the trio, the perpetual interchange we can develop, " says the leader. "It's the
kind of 'ménage à trois' that makes us provoke one another and react to
what happens."Music Charge: $25 / $30 Fri. & Sat.

10/22 Mingus Big Band

"Just because I'm playing jazz, I don't forget about me. I play or write
me, the way I feel, through jazz or whatever. Music is, or was, the language
of the emotions…My music is alive and it's about the living and the dead, about
good and evil." – Charles Mingus, "An Open Letter to Miles Davis, " DownBeat
(1956)Music Charge: $25

"Freddie Bryant is a brilliant young guitarist and composer, " declared Kenny Burrell
(who knows one when he hears one). Bryant is a mainstay of both Ben Riley's Monk
Legacy Septet and the Mingus Orchestra; his skill and sensitivity have made him
a first–call accompanist for such diverse artists as Brazilian pianist/vocalist
Eliane Elias, African singer Salif Keita, and the virtuoso klezmer clarinetist Maestro
Giora Feidman. This Jazz Standard one–nighter will launch Freddie's latest album,
Live Grooves...Epic Tales, and feature the all–star band that appears on
such great tracks as "Blues Koan, " "Alone, " "Beginner's Mind, " and "Bo Diddley."
"A gifted guitarist who is classically trained with jazz chops to spare...Though
he is still in his mid–30s, Bryant's compositions...display a remarkable maturity
and grace." (James Lamperetta, The Saratogan) Music Charge: $20

And now for something completely different: Bronze Nemesis (Doc-Tone Records),
a collection of twelve fantastic musical adventures inspired by the amazing worlds
of Doc Savage, pulp novel hero of the Thirties and Forties. Join composer/saxophonist
Scott Robinson and his co-adventurers Ted Rosenthal, Randy Sandke, Dennis Irwin,
Pat O'Leary and Dennis Mackrel as they investigate "The Secret in the Sky, " "The
Man Who Shook the Earth, " "Weird Valley" and nine more astonishing mysteries. This
am­bitious musical undertaking, some ten years in the making, features leader Robinson
on the oversized contrabass sax, Theremin, and other unusual instruments. This recording
is endorsed by original Bantam paperback artist James Bama, and features his iconic
pose of Doc Savage on the front cover!Music Charge: $20

George Coleman would be a legendary figure in jazz for his crucial role in the Miles
Davis Quintet of 1963–64, even if he'd never recorded a string of fine albums as
a leader. Coleman fans have heard him most often in an acoustic setting with longtime
Memphis running partner, pianist Harold Mabern. But this week at Jazz Standard,
the sagacious tenor man explores his rare–groove side in the company of hard–hitting
organist Mike LeDonne and fleet–fingered guitarist Russell Malone. "The dignity
and class of George Coleman cannot be overemphasized…" (Michael G. Nastos, AllMusic.com)Music Charge: $25/$30 Fri. & Sat.

10/29 Mingus Big Band

"Jazz, by its very definition, cannot be held down to written parts to be played
with a feeling that goes only with blowing free. A classical musician might read
all the notes correctly, but play them without the correct feeling or interpretation;
a jazz musician, although he might read all the notes and play them with jazz feeling,
inevitably introduces his own individual expression rather than what the
composer intended. It is amazing how many ways a four–bar phrase of four beats per
measure can be interpreted!" – Charles Mingus, from his liner notes to Atlantic
LP Pithecanthropus Erectus (1956).Music Charge: $25

Known for his thrilling displays of percussive technique and signature ride–cymbal
touch, drummer Francisco Mela speaks with Afro–Cuban tongues even as his music echoes
the tradition of jazz giants like Chick Corea, Miles Davis, Elvin Jones and Thelonious
Monk. Joe Lovano, McCoy Tyner, Kenny Barron, and JoAnne Brackeen are among those
can attest to Mela's charisma, sophistication, and peerless musi­cianship. He opens
this Jazz Standard double–header with two sets by an outstanding quartet that features
guitarist Gilad Hekselman and Grammy–nominated saxophonist Ben Wendel.Music Charge: $20

Tonight we celebrate the release of Tree of Life, a new album by Francisco
Mela's Cuban Safari. With this group, Mela pays homage to some of his key inspirations
including Joe Zawinul and Wayne Shorter's Weather Report; the Miles Davis group
with Chick Corea and Keith Jarrett; and the Latin jazz supergroup Irakere. Travelers
may expect a spell of thunder and lighting on this "safari" before we reach shimmering
new horizons!Music Charge: $20